4.7 Article

Projecting urban heat island effect on the spatial-temporal variation of microbial respiration in urban soils of Moscow megalopolis

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 786, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147457

Keywords

Urbanization; C stocks and fluxes; Digital soil mapping; Microbial activity; Mesoclimatic anomaly; C turnover; Soil C resistance

Funding

  1. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [1929-05187]
  2. Russian Foundation [17-77-20046]
  3. RUDN University Strategic Academic Leadership Program

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This study investigated the impact of urban heat island on soil microbial respiration in Moscow megalopolis, revealing an average increase of 5-10% in microbial respiration due to urban heat island and up to 25% in the most affected locations. The research highlights the vulnerability of urban topsoil carbon stocks to mineralization intensified by mesoclimatic anomalies.
Urbanization coincides with remarkable environmental changes including vegetation, soil and climate. An urban heat island is a well-known urban mesoclimatic anomaly, however its effect on functions of urban soils considering their spatial-temporal variability remain overlooked. The research aimed to explain the urban heat island effect on soil microbial respiration by linking meso-climatic CCLM and TERRA_URB models and the digital soil mapping approach for the case of Moscow megalopolis. Moscow megalopolis is the biggest city in Russia, which experiences on-going urbanization within the New Moscow project. As a result, a clear urbanization gradient was observed in land-use structure, climate and soil properties. For the study period (May-October 2019), the increase in average monthly temperature of urban soils compared to rural reached 1.7 and 2.0 degrees C in June and September with the maximal values obtained in the city center. The significant effect of soil temperature, carbon content and pH on soil microbial (basal) respiration was estimated based on the lab experiment with a representative sample of urban topsoils (n = 140). The resulting equation was integrated with the mesoclimatic data in two ways: i) considering urban heat islands (based on the modelled 500 m grid soil temperature maps) and ii) non-considering urban heat islands (based on the average monthly rural soil temperature). Comparison of the results showed that urban heat island increased microbial respiration by 5-10% on average and up to 25% in the most affected locations. The additional amount of CO2 which could be potentially emitted by soil microbes as a result of the urban heat island in Moscow megapolis was on average 0.2 Mg C ha & minus;1 (0-10 cm layer; 1.1 g cm & minus;3bulk density). Small scale green zones in the city center (public gardens, residential court yards and green lawns along the roads) where high soil C contents coincided with the maximal urban heat island effect were the hotspots of microbial respiration. Although the estimated absolute values could be rather uncertain, the research highlights the vulnerability of urban topsoil C stocks to mineralization intensified by mesoclimatic anomalies. (c) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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